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Mar 16, 2013
03/13
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they want to see the economy grow. less in the future is better for the economy and markets. neil: that would mean no that if we are continuing on this trend, everything that the markets are celebrating right now, slobby sequestration, whenever you want to call it could be short-lived and there could be problems. what do you see happening? >> well, i think rand paul messages effective not only for the markets, but for the economy and the country at large because he is making a connection between economic liberty and prosperity. he understands that does look to the 20th-ctury. always the most prosperous countries are always the most free. and the message of essentially constitutionality, individual rights, that is tremendously bullish for the market. bullish for the economy. hitting t nail on the head. the fact that everything investors are seeing that we had a sequestered. this guy did not fall. there is still more work to be done in terms of cutting the size of government and going the size of the private economy. neil: that might have been something that job in the republic
they want to see the economy grow. less in the future is better for the economy and markets. neil: that would mean no that if we are continuing on this trend, everything that the markets are celebrating right now, slobby sequestration, whenever you want to call it could be short-lived and there could be problems. what do you see happening? >> well, i think rand paul messages effective not only for the markets, but for the economy and the country at large because he is making a connection...
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Mar 15, 2013
03/13
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neil: a stimulus to the economy. he has always been that way. it pays to focus on what bill gates and doing now, he is on a spending mission, he leaves little doubt about what he thinks of republican mission and their drive to cool it on the spending without thinking about results, his biggest fear, congress cutting foreign aid. the man said that foreign raid does a lot of good for the planet. to gauge the more good than bad without a doubt, that is why the guy, he was in washington today pushing hard. urging freshmen lawmakers not to give up the fight or spending on those 2 need the help -- who need the help the most, tonight. decide whether a man can or should stop congress from closing some spending doors, perhaps of all of the interviews i've done with bill gates over the years from earliest days at microsoft or before he became the power house to keeping his juggernaut going once it was a power house to going full time in charity business, this day is for me the most meaningful and consequential, not because of anything i asked of mr. gates
neil: a stimulus to the economy. he has always been that way. it pays to focus on what bill gates and doing now, he is on a spending mission, he leaves little doubt about what he thinks of republican mission and their drive to cool it on the spending without thinking about results, his biggest fear, congress cutting foreign aid. the man said that foreign raid does a lot of good for the planet. to gauge the more good than bad without a doubt, that is why the guy, he was in washington today...
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Mar 14, 2013
03/13
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i think, look, china is here to stay, the second largest economy in the world. we need to have a constructive relationship with them. it would be foolish not to. neil: second term, brack brk, going -- barack obama going to make much progress? >> in what? neil: anything. >> i hope we get the house in order on a balance sheet. neil: do you think that's going to happen? >> i have doubts. neil: yeah, i share your doubt. always a pleasure, sir. >> always good to see you. neil: thank you very much. when we come back, remember when the president said this tuesday in >> we cannot and will not sustain deficits like these without end. we cannot spend as we please and defer consequences. neil: why what the president said today could prove what he said that day or all the other days after this. ♪ at a dry cleaner, we replad people wiwith a machine. what? customers didn't like it. so why do banks do it? hello? hello?! if your bank doesn't let you talk to a real perso24/7, you need an ally. hello? ally bank. your money needs an ally. neil: caught on tape and caught saying m
i think, look, china is here to stay, the second largest economy in the world. we need to have a constructive relationship with them. it would be foolish not to. neil: second term, brack brk, going -- barack obama going to make much progress? >> in what? neil: anything. >> i hope we get the house in order on a balance sheet. neil: do you think that's going to happen? >> i have doubts. neil: yeah, i share your doubt. always a pleasure, sir. >> always good to see you....
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Mar 14, 2013
03/13
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neil: what's a less erroneous, less crippling economy cutthat we could afford? >> i thi one way that we could look at this is to look at the experience of canada in the 1990s which did $5-$7 of spending cuts for every $1 of tax hikes. they substantially reduced government spending and saw a boom as a result of it. neil: guys, thank you very much. we shall see. on this and other subjects, bill gates, founder of microsoft, second richest person on the planet, jos me on what he thinks of this tax talk, and the impact that tax hikes on charitable contributions and the rest. next, we have hank giving the governme a big spanking. greenberg on the 55 billion lawsuit, and why washington is the one bullying. the one bullying. he has the facts, figures, and at a dry cleaner, the one bullying. he has the facts, figures, and we replaced people with a machine. what? customers didn't like it. so why do banks do it? hello? hello?! if your bank doesn't let you talk to a real person 24/7, you need an ally. hello? ally bank. your money needs an ally. i took my son fishing every y
neil: what's a less erroneous, less crippling economy cutthat we could afford? >> i thi one way that we could look at this is to look at the experience of canada in the 1990s which did $5-$7 of spending cuts for every $1 of tax hikes. they substantially reduced government spending and saw a boom as a result of it. neil: guys, thank you very much. we shall see. on this and other subjects, bill gates, founder of microsoft, second richest person on the planet, jos me on what he thinks of...